>>106116349>Why wouldn't they put the cases inside a cage?You can't rent a hotel room in China without tapping your ID card on a scanner with a camera and biometrics and this is input into a national database instantly.
Foreigners don't get the face thing except in tier 1 cities but there's passport scanners that put you into an immigration database of everywhere you've stayed.
Stealing big name items from hotel rooms in China is retarded, best case scenario, they can't prove which guest stole something if it's not checked by house keeping when you check out but house keeping in China often does run through a checklist before letting you check out.
Depends on the hotel and if there's anything worth stealing.
>>106116376>internet gaming cafes will just switch to using cloud services like GeForce Now on low-end hardwareIf it can just be streamed from a high-end server in a secure room in the building, that would be adequate.
>>106116568>he thinks chinese policemen are rich and wouldn't take 5 dollars as a bribeThey're definitely middle-class and a career as a cop will set you up to open a side-business and semi-retire.
Your information about bribery in China is a few decades out of date, the way it works and who can do it has changed a lot since Xi took power.
Cops (and officials in general) don't risk bribes from nobodies, corruption is always a potential death sentence, even if it's usually prison and fines.
The way it works if that you need to know someone that knows the cop and go through them, or at least know another cop who can step in and see if the cop is interested but if you just have a buddy who's a cop in another station, that's probably not going to work either. Too high risk for both cops.
Bribery at low levels is rare in China these days, the Tigers and Flies campaign was pretty effective at wiping out the low level stuff. It helped provide credibility and cover for the political purges that it was used for at the high levels.